Anonymous wrote:OP is ignorant. Can't wait until OP becomes a parent.
I almost feel like it's a troll
Anonymous wrote:You know what I don't get? Why you're even posting here since you're not a parent. Are you bored?
Anonymous wrote:I see people are going to be stuck on Spanish.
For future readers of this post, there’s nothing wrong with Spanish! My school always uses me as the ‘Spanish Translator’ all the time, it’s very helpful with some parents.
It’s helpful in Spain too, which is one of my favorite countries in Europe. Mexico is also pretty great too, and the rest I have yet to venture to.
The point was will I get paid a lot more for knowing Spanish? No, even if I were to change my profession.
Some people really take things so personally. I’m seriously only wondering why DC parents literally go crazy for dual language!
Anonymous wrote:Uhhh. I was with you until you said Spanish. Personally I think kids should be exposed to languages but not expected to learn, because doing it right requires intensive, immersive learning and it’s often not done well
But I use Spanish all the time so I don’t know what you’re talking about there.
Anonymous wrote:LOL @ spanish. I agree with OP, pointless investment. Use the instruction time for something worthwhile. Chinese maybe. Or just more math or even English because US students are terrible at both.
Anonymous wrote:I use Spanish often and many friends have had to scramble to learn as adults for various reasons (spouse gets a job in a south American country or Mexico, they get a job that is easier with some spanish, they have to train spanish speakers...). I will admit that speaking Spanish is getting more frequent than the past couple of decades but Im around more people. I never hear about someone getting an opportunity through speaking Mandarin and Ive known people who have to do business in China (more in Singapore or Malaysia) and they speak zero Mandarin. I speak a little Mandarin among other languages because languages are easier for me to learn (because I grew up bilingual). To me Spanish is of greater worth for a wider net of fields (energy, infrastructure...) that would do business with the U.S..
Anonymous wrote:OP sounds trollish, immature, and racist.
Putting all of that aside, there are over 500 million Spanish speakers in the world, and the overwhelming majority live in or close to our time zones. There's a whole hemisphere of untapped opportunity. Not the language of business, you say? I learned Spanish as a second language and became an international lawyer with work and contacts in a dozen Latin American countries. Then I retired and can travel freely to virtually anywhere in Latin America that I want and enjoy authentic cultural experiences with real people in places where others without my Spanish language skills can only dream of.
I'll also guarantee that when OP was in Barcelona she was speaking English because her Spanish wasn't very good.
Grow up, OP. You have a lot to learn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know what I don't get? Why you're even posting here since you're not a parent. Are you bored?
I will be a parent in the future and my fiancé is already thinking about DL. I’m also a teacher so sometimes I browse this forum to see what parents think about my school. Is that ok with you, your highness?
NP, but you sound pretty immature. Glad you're not teaching my kid--are you sure you're a teacher, and what grade could you possibly teach?
I’m 21, there’s still things I need to learn but I know how to be professional when the environment calls for it and when I should be respectful. It’s not immature to ask a question and I don’t think your passive aggressive jabs really make you a mature person.
But the feeling is mutual, all my parents love me, thank goodness I don’t have any who are so irritable.
I will say I put some bias in the post (which I said) and perhaps I could have worded it better.
This will be my last response to you, have a lovely evening